CommunityHealthFinal

Page 14

Community Health Programs

Building Bridges, Knowledge and Health MONICA HIDALGO • Manager • moh9017@nyp.org x DEBORAH ACEVEDO, RN • Nurse Coordinator • acevedd@nyp.org KAYLEEN GARCIA • Program Coordinator • kag9132@nyp.org Mission and Goals

Number of People Reached

Building Bridges, Knowledge and Health (BBKH) is a coalition of faithand community-based organizations that collaborate to decrease racial/ ethnic health disparities and enhance the health and well-being of residents of Northern Manhattan, Harlem, and the Bronx. Faith-based members are a valuable resource for the BBKH coalition. They work as conduits of good health to respond to community health needs and implement interventions that achieve meaningful and lasting results.

4,000

NewYork-Presbyterian’s Outreach team has collaborated with BBKH member churches—some include the Van Nest Assembly of God, Convent Avenue Baptist Church, the Narrow Door Church, Christ Church, and Grace Tabernacle—to provide free vision and blood pressure screenings and instruction in hands-only CPR training. We have also collaborated with the Weill Cornell HeartSmarts program to provide two 12-week programs to two churches. One of our BBKH Spanish members received program training and was able to provide the first-ever HeartSmarts class in Spanish to the Washington Heights community. Both co-hosts saw lasting lifestyle changes and marked improvements in weight loss, BMI, BP, A1C, and waist circumference.

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Key Accomplishments

In 2019, NewYork-Presbyterian, in partnership with BBKH program members, again supported New York City’s First Lady Chirlane McCray’s ThriveNYC initiative by offering Mental Health First Aid trainings to 200 community members. We hosted our Third Annual Clergy Summit, where nearly 100 faith- and community-based organizations participated in learning more on the topic of “Homelessness: Learning From the Faith Community.” Ydanis Rodriguez, NYC Council member for the 10th District, spoke about homelessness in our community, and Patricia Hernandez, LCSW, spoke on the housing crisis. Panelists from around the city’s faithbased community presented their programs that address the needs of the homeless. Each year, BBKH partners with NewYorkPresbyterian’s Outreach Program to host Hope Day in the Bronx, attracting over 1,500 city residents and providing access to free health screenings, information, counseling, resources, medical referrals, and health insurance information. Through telephone followup, participants are connected to primary care, and health counseling is reinforced. At Hope Day in the Bronx, we team up

with a dozen churches that jointly help carry out this event. Our involvement in the faith-based community also includes work that benefits the homeless population: • Two health luncheons in the Bowery Mission Women’s and Men’s Residency Centers. •H omeless Outreach “Don’t Walk By” events (every Saturday in February)—in partnership with the Salvation Army, New York City Rescue Mission, and the Bowery Mission. We provide funding for backpacks, as well as medical care during the events. NewYork-Presbyterian sent RNs and other volunteers to both the 2019 and the 2020 events. We also donated backpacks for the homeless guests at the events. •H ealth education and screenings, in collaboration with local churches and community organizations. In 2019, we continued to partner with the Church of the Epiphany to provide monthly blood pressure and HIV screenings and counseling at its weekly soup kitchen, which provides meals to guests—mostly adults who are homeless or food insecure. We were able to award a guest a free digital blood pressure machine because of the improvement in blood pressure and weight loss. In December, in partnership with staff from the Milstein community outreach committee, we provided free reading glasses, thermals, and coats to homeless shelters. We also contributed thermals and coats to homeless youth who participate in the Drop-In Program at the Dominican Women’s Development


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Waiting Room As a Literacy & Learning Environment (WALLE

2min
page 49

Uptown Hub

3min
pages 50-51

Women, Infants, and Children Program (WIC

1min
pages 52-54

Turn 2 Us (T2U

5min
pages 46-48

Substance Use Disorder Peer Program

1min
page 41

The Family PEACE (Preventing Early Adverse Childhood Experiences) Trauma Treatment Center

3min
pages 44-45

Reach Out and Read Program

1min
page 40

Lang Youth Medical Program

2min
page 33

Healthy City Kids

0
page 32

Cultural Competency and Health Literacy Workgroup: A Collaboration between the Division and NewYork-Presbyterian Performing Provider System

1min
page 29

Choosing Healthy & Active Lifestyles for Kids™ (CHALK

4min
pages 22-23

Health for Life

1min
page 30

Outreach Program

2min
pages 38-39

Community-Based Sexual Health

7min
pages 24-28

CCHE: School-Based Health Center Program

1min
page 18

ANCHOR (Addressing the Needs of the Community Through Holistic, Organizational Relationships

1min
page 11

Center for Community Health and Education

1min
page 16

Expanding Our Reach to Help More Neighbors

2min
page 3

Building Bridges, Knowledge and Health Coalition

3min
pages 14-15

Division of Community and Population Health: Our Mission

2min
pages 4-5

Behavioral Health Clinical Services (Outpatient

5min
pages 12-13

CCHE: Family Planning Program and Young Men’s Clinic

2min
page 17

Community Health Needs Assessment and Community Health Service Plan

4min
pages 6-9
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